46 Who Insures Leading Publishing Companies? P ITBLISHERS, with their technical staffs, costly equipment and stocks of ma- terials, are subj ect to loss through various accidental hazards. Several of the foremost puh- lishing companies in the l- oited States retain Schiff, Terhune and Company to investigate their risks and arrange their insur ance coverage. We like- wise serve hundreds of organi- zations in many fields of in. dustry, commerce and finance. We would he glad to make a survey which, at no cost to you, may disclose ways to strengthen your insurance structure, and give you greater immunity against loss at lower cost. One oj a series oj advertisements showing how Schiff. Terhune & Company serves American Industry. Schiff, Ter 2!TE Company d-& !C{ne f?JJ d 99 John Street, New York 7, N. y NEW YORK · CHICAGO. SAN FRANCISCO. LOS ANGELES. MILWAUKEE t.......'.......,..........,......... ,"..............:... HABIT' OF A LIFE, TIME .. - 'Onee ' a Ulan wears ,our hand.;t't1ade :'RUîll on' ! . . ... . .' . -; . : - .:.... . ..... :. - -. ...:" :. . - .. - . , he aequit,t's a ,}c}abif:thal":Ø:sual1y l'aS!Ei tt":life tinle.", ,- . - . . . Never again will }Ú :, '-h :,'satisfied: 'wit}i-: anything,: less than ',itsrlussic Ct sto'ln l)e.auty ,,: , , So soft it neetlt; no ","4br:e.akh1 ,,::rn . .:,,.. .. . . . . -. ..,. --- - so sturdy it retains, '"its óiigÌ-nal' 'shape far beyond an" ordinary shoe',. . . So rugged, it t r 1l1y ,te:p ë ::' se,nts, the' èoi1Ò:lny Q:f long wear. Designed 'by, Whitehouse &. lIardy, hand<<nu. .d ' by': J ohn- ston & Murphy. ' " ond cI:i!:' 1",:1:' R UM: , ' , , 33jS. 'v>... " ,":,::= -:-.-2 ro.,'., ,", :J };it;!:/"" ; :,-: y ,)0 oI':,. - ,,' ... ,:' :(- ;X:.'," .(?;. .: "; . , >& L. &'''''L'r !;>Y JOH RpW' . ,..: <:).t -: Æ:lf f ;:"N , . . :,, ;,;:/( ,1J7rìte,,{br photos oJ':' other shoe styles '695 f-ifth Ävenue tot 54th Street)" 1,429 8roadway, (at' 40th Street) , 335 Madison Ave {B-iltmore Hotel) NewYork l N.Y. ...................................'..................... ..: but he has alreqdy grossed fifteen thou- sand on it, having sold some two thousand copies at seven-fifty apiece. He expects that one of these days it will be accepted as the standard truck-route guide in the East, for, as far as he is aware, it is the only map in existence that shows every road and hamlet of any consequence from here to Rich- mond, to the south; Pittsburgh and Buffalo, to the west; and Portland, to the north. Hagstrom moved from Nas3au Street to Vesey Street in 1929. \Vhen hard times came, in the early thirties, he managed to hold on to his business, but only just. In 1932, he began to make a comeback, thanks,- in part, to the ex- ecutors of the vigorously fought-over estate of Ella \Vendel, who engaged him to make some charts of the baffling anø. apparently endless ramifications of the \Vendel family, to be used to apprise a surrogate of the difference (if any) between a cousin-german four times removed and a great-great- uncle's mother-in-Iaw's niece. Hag- strom responded by diagramming a family tree that measured eighteen feet by five. The work Hagstrom did on the Wendel case earned him such a reputa- tion in legal circles that, a few months later, Thomas E. Dewey, who was be- ginning to attract public attention by his prosecution of \Vaxey Gordon on a charge of income-tax evasion, com- missioned him to prepare a series of diagrams and maps that would make clear the full extent of the defendant's activities, to be presented to the jury as visual evidence. Hagstrom produced about forty drawings, showing how many phone calls Gordon had made in a given month and what numbers he had called, how much of his illegal take he had deposited daily and in what banks, where his beer distributors had operated, and how many trucks he had owned, how long he had owned them, and under what aliases. Hagstrom likes to conjecture about how much his con- tribution had to do with Gordon's being fined eighty thousand dollars and sent to Leavenworth for ten years and with Dewey's having since been twice a can- didate for the Presidency. Hagstrom looks upon the Governor as a friend. Dewey used to hold conferences on the Gordon case in the steam room of the Crystal Health Club, in the base- ment of the Woolworth Building, not far from the courthouse, and Hagstrom attended them occasionally. "Plenty of times I've talked business with the Gov- ernor in his birthday suit," he frequently